Thirstbaràvin Jeebus (Brooklyn disorderlies)

Zachary Ross

Zachary Ross
A contingent of Brooklyn disorderlies and likeminded comrades met last night for a jeebus at Thirstbaràvin in Crown Heights. Thirstbaràvin has been mentioned here before; it’s a swell place with great wines and quite good food. In attendance were Jeff, Jason, Morgan, Suzanne, Jay, and yours truly. (It was great meeting Jason, Morgan, and Suzanne, and seeing Jeff and Jay once again.) The theme was wines of the Northern Rhône. The Thirst people (Michael, Emilia) were extremely accommodating and provided excellent service.

Before we got into the reds, we started off with a bunch of small plates (cured olives, oeufs mayonnaise, pork tonnato, house-made pork terrine and headcheese, lentils with lardons and egg) and some sparkling and white wines:

NV (2005) René Geoffroy Champagne Volupté Brut Terrific champagne, light and airy with exotic spice. Terrific with the olives and, curiously, the beef main (Beef Daube, a flavorful brothy beef stew with olives) that most of us had.

NV Les Champs Libres Saint-Péray ordered off Thirstbar’s list. A sparkling Marsanne “vin naturel” made by René-Jean Dard and Hervé Souhaut. Of lesser interest than the superb Champagne, but still a fine drink; cidery with some brothy aspects and a spicy finish.

2007 Domaine du Tunnel (Stéphane Robert) Saint-Péray Cuvée Roussanne lovely. Floral and rich, very young, peachy and mineral, with air some new oak shows itself but remains well composed.

On to the reds:

2006 Pierre Gonon Saint-Joseph a beauty. Dark and smoky, almost downy in texture and complex with autumnal leaves, meat, etc. Some suggested it was a bit advanced for its age but it seemed just right to me. Gonon is awesome.

1989 Robert Michel Cornas Cuvée des Coteaux corked.

1990 Robert Michel Cornas La Geynale Magnificent. Just a superb bottle. Utterly weightless and graceful, huge spicy nose, just a pleasure to spend time with. My favorite red of the night, and I believe everyone else’s as well.

Jeff got ahead of himself here and jumped into the Côte-Rôties, even though there were two more Cornas waiting to happen. We took it in stride.

1999 Jean-Michel Stephan Côte-Rôtie Vieille Vigne en Coteaux very pretty and savory, compact red-fruited core, elegant and delicious.

2001 Guy Bernard Côte-Rôtie brett bomb. Also very young and hard. Bleh.

Back to the forgotten Cornas; probably best that they should have stayed forgotten:

2005 Marcel Juge Cornas another disappointing Juge, again marked by diacetyl buttery popcorn, though not nearly as severely as the 2004 Cuvée C that sparked a long thread here earlier. Still, ruined. Stay away from these most recent releases.

1997 Thierry Allemand Cornas Reynard corked. Fuck.

We had one sweet wine:

2008 Pierre Gonon Vin de Pays des Collines Rhodaniennes at least I think that’s what it was. This was just ok. Nice and sweet, but nothing to get too excited about. I didn’t get to try it with the delicious apple tart.

My favorite reds were the 1990 Michel Geynale, the 2006 Gonon St.-Jo, and the 1999 Stephan Côte-Rôtie. The champagne might have been my favorite wine of the night.

All in all, a great time.
 
A few more edits for you:
- The Geoffroy was the 05 and Brut.
- The 89 Michel was the Coteaux, not the Geynale.
- The Stephan was the VV En Coteaux bottling.
 
Good to hear about the love for the '06 Gonon as I have some of that. When you say that some considered it too evolved, where does that put it in its evolution? I'd guess that it is still years away from maturity.

Mark Lipton
 
I think I must have been goin' to Carolina Brooklyn in my mind, because I had small wine-bar plates and downed a couple of pretty bottles of 1999 Allemand Cornas "Chaillot" yesterday evening.*

Nice writeup, and sounds like an interesting spot.

*Not alone, don't worry.
 
Thanks Jeff, fixed.

Mark, I think there was some surprise (though just a little) at how approachable the Gonon was, and it was, but it also seemed to have many great years ahead of it as well.
 
originally posted by MLipton:
When you say that some considered it too evolved, where does that put it in its evolution? I'd guess that it is still years away from maturity.
Morgan thought he was smelling more pork and smoke than the age justified. I think he was just noticing that (a) the acidity is a little low in 06 in the N Rhone, and (b) Gonon's property is some of the best in the appellation and the wine is more fragrant and complex.
 
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I don't know why that René Geoffroy was being so shy.
 
Just want to add that I found the Dom. Tunnel St Peray to be rather lightweight (unlike the stupid Marketing-Department bottle it came in). It was minerally but not particularly pleasurable. The fizzy St Peray from Les Champs Libres was a peasant, by comparison, but rather a cheerful one.
 
The Gonon was a medium weight delight. I think speculation of whether it's too advanced were just due to how good it tastes now :).

The 1990 Cornas was a beautiful wine, though maybe a hair too ripe for me. I was the only one who gave a slight nod to the Gonon but I can understand that.

It was wonderful to have a chance to revisit the Stephan after all these years but I have to admit that as good as it was I preferred it on release.

The Champagne was good on it's own but really came to life with the olives and the beef daube. Still a bit bemused over that. By comparison it wasn't such a great match with the delicious gougeres they comped us.

The restaurant was a delightful outpost of civilization in the midst of a mostly industrial area. The gougeres, the pork terrine and the apple tart were all stand outs for me with an honorable mention to the eggs mayonnaise. Really nice wine selection. Any place with 2009 Thevenet Morgon VV on the list is one I'm happy to drink at.

BTW - you won't be seeing as much of me here in the future as my work site has blocked the site (curiously neither wldg nor wineberserkers seem to classify as an alcohol related site - at least yet) as part of a larger project to block anything non work related. The main topic of conversation amongst employees is the best place to buy an iPad.
 
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
Jay,

I had this same problem for awhile...
You work in the wine business and they want to block your access to wine-related websites?

Well, it's not much of a concern at the moment, mind you.
 
By the way, I dropped by Thirstbar tonight for a quick glass - Michael and Emilia reiterated how happy they were to host us, and invited us to repeat the experience anytime.
 
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